james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
Specifically with the table top fusion device.

Assume a probe has to be at least 5 tonnes to be interesting and that mass
ratios as high as e^3 are acceptable. Assume (since this thing doesn't produce
power) that we can dedicate a 10 gigawatt beam to powering this, of such a
wavelength that distance between the power plant and the probe isn't an insurmountable problem. In that case, I get an acceleration somewhere between
1/15 m/s/s and 1.33 m/s/s, with a final delta vee of around (obviously) 9,000 km/s. Does that look right?

If we are lazy, and I am, and we just use the 1/15 m/s/s value, then it takes
about 1560 days for the reaction mass to run out at which point the probe will be around 4000 AU out, moving at 3% the speed of light. Hmmm. 4000 AU suggests a short wavelength for the beam....

OK, it still takes so long to reach Alpha C that if such a probe were arriving now, it would have had to have been launched during the American Civil War. The probe does reach one light year in about a career's time, though.
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